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lousewort

[ lous-wurt, -wawrt ]

noun

  1. any plant belonging to the genus Pedicularis, of the figwort family, as the wood betony, formerly supposed to cause lice in sheep feeding on it: one species, P. furbishiae Furbish lousewort, of parts of Maine and New Brunswick, Canada, having finely toothed leaves and a cluster of yellow flowers, is endangered and was thought to be extinct until specimens were discovered in 1946 and again in 1976.


lousewort

/ ˈlaʊsˌwɜːt /

noun

  1. any of various N temperate scrophulariaceous plants of the genus Pedicularis, having spikes of white, yellow, or mauve flowers See also betony
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of lousewort1

First recorded in 1570–80; louse + wort 2
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Example Sentences

The very plants were unknown to them—pink lousewort with its sprays of hooked flowers, bog asphodel and the thin-stemmed blooms of the sundews, rising above their hairy, fly-catching mouths, all shut fast by night.

In his autobiography, “On the Move,” Dr. Sacks wrote of walking a meadow in the Canadian Rockies with “three botanical ladies,” who taught him the names of the local flora: globe flowers, Indian paintbrush, contorted lousewort.

A meal of frozen possum stewed with lichens, snakeweed, and lousewort.

An abundance of wildflowers — woolly lousewort, campion, lupine, buttercups, Arctic poppy –  create a carpet of color. 

Shirley Lontz Moorhead, Minn. Regarding your reference to the Furbish lousewort as a weed.

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